Lara Trump, co-chair of the Republican National Committee (RNC) and daughter-in-law of former President Donald Trump, confirmed that she and other new leaders started their first day on the job with âa lot of restructuring of people at the RNC.â
In an exclusive interview with The Epoch Times on March 12, Ms. Trump didnât divulge the number of RNC employees who were laid off March 11 when she and other leaders took the helm. She said the final number isnât settled because âthere are some people who will come back and there are some who will not.â
But, she said, the new leadersâ immediate actions demonstrate âwe really are very seriousâ about the partyâs paramount goal: Helping President Trump and other Republicans win elections.
That means raising money, spending it wisely, engaging voters, and making sure their votes count.
âItâs the dawn of a new day at the RNC,â Ms. Trump, wife of President Trumpâs son, Eric, said. âI think it’ll be a breath of fresh air for people to see a lot of the things we do.â
She and other top leadersâincluding the new chairman Michael Whatley, who has headed North Carolinaâs GOPâare playing hardball.
âWe are not there to make friends; we are there to win,â Ms. Trump said. âIf you are really focused on that goal, you do have to say ânoâ to people; you do have to have those hard conversations.â
That attitude represents a major shift. For years, the RNC operated like a âgood-ol’-boysâ clubâ full of glad-handers, politicos have told The Epoch Times.
In response to that characterization, Ms. Trump said: âI think that is the sentiment that far too many people had about the RNC. And thatâs why you saw my father-in-law call for a change in leadership there.â
The ascension of Ms. Trump and Mr. Whatleyâalong with longtime co-manager of the Trump campaign, Chris LaCivita, as RNC chief operations officerâcements President Trumpâs position as the de facto leader of the GOP.
âThis change in leadership signals a complete integration between the RNC and the Trump campaign,â said J. Matthew Wilson, political science professor at Southern Methodist University.
âClearly, the MAGA faction is now firmly in control of the Republican Party,â he said, referring to President Trumpâs âMake America Great Againâ (MAGA) slogan.
Whether these changes benefit the party as a whole remains to be seen, but Ms. Trump expressed determination to work for the good of the entire Republican Party, not just her father-in-law.

Lara Trump stands with supporters of former President Donald Trump at an event prior to the South Carolina Republican primary election in Beaufort, S.C., on Feb. 21, 2024. (Evelyn Hockstein/Reuters)
Past vs. Present
Ronna McDaniel, RNC chairwoman since 2017 with the backing of President Trump, stepped down March 8 amid long-simmering accusations of poor leadership, anemic fundraising, and a string of losses and missed opportunities. High on the list: Republicansâ failure to capture the U.S. Senate majority in November 2022.
At the meeting, RNC committee member Cynthia Henry of Alaska told The Epoch Times she detected people were feeling âreal good about the change in leadership.â She thinks they are âgrateful for the past leadership and inspired by the new leadership style.â
Yet some observers worry about the increasingly strong ties to President Trump, particularly because he is toting some heavy baggage: 91 criminal charges and numerous civil cases including one that resulted in a $355 million fine that he is appealing. He and his supporters denounce the legal attacks as âlawfareâ and âelection interference.â
Democrats, meanwhile, are giddy over the opposing partyâs upheaval, its nearly empty coffers, and the continuing legal perils that President Trump faces.
Still, many of the GOP faithful are expressing excitement over what they see as a metamorphosis. They envision the RNC emerging stronger and reinvigorated, following years of stagnation and foolhardy decision-making.
Ballot harvesting, which is legal in many states, allows people to deliver other votersâ absentee or mail-in ballots to election officials. Some fear this practice facilitates election fraud. Republicans have long frowned upon it; Democrats have taken advantage of it. âWhether or not they [Democrats] do it legally, thatâs up for discussion,â Ms. Trump said.
In any case, Ms. Trump said itâs time for Republicans to start âattacking the game differently.â

Republican National Committee Chair Ronna McDaniel speaks at the committee’s winter meeting in Dana Point, Calif., Jan. 27, 2023. (Jae C. Hong/AP Photo, File)
Past Priorities Skewed
In an interview prior to Ms. McDanielâs exit, Tyler Bowyer, a national RNC committeeman from Arizona, told The Epoch Times that change âcouldnât come soon enough.â
He said Ms. McDaniel was âtaking serious advantage of Trumpâs nameâ to raise money, âwhich any smart chairperson would do.â
But then she sanctioned debates that âjust gave fodder to attack Trump,â he said. And the RNC could no longer tie its fundraising to President Trumpâs name, for fear of showing favoritism to him while he faced other GOP challengers. That left him and other like-minded RNC members saying âwe told you so,â he said.
Mr. Bowyer said the old RNC leadership was not necessarily anti-Trump; he thinks they âhad other interests at heart.â In his view, the old leadership team was preoccupied with appeasing entrenched Republican politicians.
They lacked âthe intestinal fortitude to make the tough, tough calls,â or to set up the party infrastructure properly, Mr. Bowyer said.
For example, he said, the RNC leadership should have told Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.), that they werenât going to let him target $10 million toward the reelection of Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska) in a race that she was almost sure to win.
Instead, the money should have been diverted to bolster Republican candidates who were fighting to unseat Democrats, Mr. Bowyer said. Senate candidate for Georgia, Herschel Walker, stood a great chance of winning in 2022 if his efforts had been better funded, he said.
If a political partyâs leader isnât willing to make decisions based on smart strategy, rather than a desire to please people such as Mr. McConnell, âyouâre going to lose,â Mr. Bowyer said.
âItâs very rare that we have leadership in the Republican Party that are willing to do this. Itâs not popular,â he said. âYouâre not going to have more friends when you leave office than when you came in.â

Supporters of former President Donald Trump get ready for a rally in Rancho Palos Verdes, Calif., on March 3, 2024. (Aude Guerrucci/Reuters/File Photo)
âEvery Pennyâ Spent To Win
A potential early test of the new RNC leadership surrounds whether the party should cover President Trumpâs legal fees.
Some of his supporters say thatâs only fair; they agree with his contention that he is being targeted for political purposes by Democrat President Joe Bidenâs allies in state and federal courts.
Others bristle at the notion that such donations would go toward legal battles.
At the RNC meeting earlier this month, member Henry Barbour of Mississippi tried to introduce a motion forbidding such payments. But the motion failed to gain enough sponsors to be placed on the agenda.
Later, two RNC committee members declined to comment on the question of paying President Trumpâs legal fees with party funds, and Mr. Barbour could not be reached for comment.
It appears there is currently no direct prohibition against the RNC paying legal expenses for the former president, who has won enough delegates to become the partyâs presumptive nominee.
Ms. Trump told The Epoch Times that all uses of money would be carefully considered.
âI think one of our huge focuses is cutting the fat and ensuring that every penny of every dollar is spent wisely, and it is spent on ways that will help us win and nothing else,â she said.
Mr. Wilson, the Southern Methodist University professor, said generating more moneyâand allocating itâis one of the biggest tasks that the new RNC leadership faces.
âThe RNC has been significantly lagging the DNC [Democratic National Committee] in terms of fundraising, and there has been dissension within many state Republican parties,â Mr. Wilson said.
âIn addition, the party has seen a series of electoral disappointments since 2018. The new leaders will need to reverse these trends and show that they can produce wins for Republican candidates up and down the ballot, not simply serve as a vehicle to advance Donald Trumpâs personal interests,â Mr. Wilson said.
In her remarks to The Epoch Times, Ms. Trump said the new RNC seeks victories, ânot just at the top of the ticket for him,â although the former president is âincredibly important.â
âBut,â she said, âwe also want to focus on the really important down-ballot races.
âWe want to expand our lead in the House; we want to take back the Senate,â Ms. Trump said.

Former President Donald Trump arrives to deliver remarks at the Georgia state GOP convention in Columbus, Ga., on June 10, 2023. (Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images)
Itâs âDonald Trumpâs Showâ
Aaron Dusso, professor of political science at Indiana UniversityâIndianapolis, pointed out that Ms. Trump âhas been a vocal presence for yearsâ in her father-in-lawâs campaign.
âThat will likely increase as she now has a formal position within the party. One would expect for her to be the front person, while Whatley works behind the scenes,â Mr. Dusso said.
âThat is not to say that Whatley would be some kind of puppetmaster, though. Clearly, this is Donald Trumpâs show and both will answer to him.â
Mr. Dusso said Ms. Trumpâs new role âsolidifies Trumpâs formal hold on the Republican Party.â
The evolution of the party to become more Trump-centric can be traced to his first presidential run beginning in 2015.
âPrior to the 2020 Republican National Convention, the party chose to simply re-adopt the 2016 platform rather than write a new one,â Mr. Dusso said.
âIt was clear then, and even more so now, that the Republican Party is Trumpâs party.â
Original News Source Link – Epoch Times
Running For Office? Conservative Campaign Consulting – Election Day Strategies!